A6000 wrote:
The great thing about the amigas custom chipset was/is that it gave each model a long life, 24 years and counting,
It was users too tight to upgrade that gave the Amiga it's long life... THe Custom chipset gave it a 4 year headstart over the rest of the industry, then the industry cought up... and the Amiga died.
whilst PCs are obsolete in 4years or less.
So that stock A1200 you bought in 1992 was still able to keep up with a PC in 1996?
If a future amiga used off the shelf parts, it would need to be regularly upgraded too, GPU's have a life span of just 2 years or so,
Nvidia have been working to a 6 month product lifecycle for a long time... I think the rate has slowed now... though I could be wrong.
and newer software would not run fast enough on a 4 year old amiga that used off the shelf parts.
How would it be any different with a custom design?
Fast processors and gigabytes of ram encourages lazy programming.
No it doesn't, it allows developers more freedom. The software I run on my MacBook Pro today would be unthinkable on a top of the line desktop machine 8 years ago!